Title: Understanding the Realities of Competitive Bidding RegulatoryCompliance Update
1Understanding the Realities of Competitive
BiddingRegulatory/Compliance Update
- Presented to NCAMES by Mark Higley
- The VGM Group
2- As HME providers are most aware, last May CMS
published its proposed rule to phase in the
competitive acquisition program, or competitive
bidding for DMEPOS under Medicare Part B. - To the concern of the industry, the proposed
regulation did not provide definitive answers to
the most pressing questions about the program,
the cities and the products included in the
initial rollout.
3- Finally, on April 2, 2007, CMS 1270 F (the Final
Rule) was released. Number of pages 401. - The bid area boundaries (by ZIP code) and the
Product Categories (by HCPC Code) were posted on
the Competitive Bidding Implementation Contractor
(CBIC) website shortly thereafter - Official site http//www.dmecompetitivebid.com
4Bidding Opened May 15 Many Providers In CBAs
Are Not Prepared!
- All suppliers submit bids using an internet
application. - There is an initial registration on the internet
application to get a USER ID and password. - The initial registration process requires the
authorized official (see Section 15 of the CMS
855S) to complete the information. - Many bidding HMEs have not yet completed the
initial registration process. They must do
immediately!
5Official Timeline
- May 15, 2007 - Bid period opened
- June 30, 2007 - Registration Deadline (Last day
to register to get user IDs and Passwords ) - July 13, 2007 60-day bid window closes
- 8/31/2007 - Last day for first round bidders to
obtain accreditation.
6- Late September 2007 CMS concludes bid evaluation
and begins contracting process. - December 2007CMS announces winning suppliers for
first round. - 1/1/08-4/1/08CMS conducts intensive beneficiary
and referral agent education campaign. - 4/1/2008 New program begins
7The Authorization
- Section 4319 of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997
(BBA) authorized up to five demonstration
projects for Medicare Part B items, excluding
physician services. CMS implemented demonstration
projects on competitive acquisition of DMEPOS at
two sites Polk County, Florida and the San
Antonio, Texas, Metropolitan Statistical Area
(MSA). The demonstrations took place from 1999 to
2002.
8 9CMS report
- The demonstration projects revealed that
substantial savings could be realized through the
implementation of competitive acquisition,
without compromising the quality of the products
being supplied. Based on these demonstrations,
CMS estimates potential savings of 20 on DMEPOS
if competitive acquisition for these products is
successfully implemented throughout the country.
Statistical data indicated that beneficiary
access and quality were essentially unchanged.
10Bottom line
- CMS states the program is projected to produce
savings of 1 billion in 2010 - The savings is based on the estimation that
competitive bidding will reduce DME spending by
12.9 percent below fee-for-service among the 70
percent of DME costs assumed to be subject to the
program by 2010. - The 12.9 percent figure is based on contractors
modeling over 90 MSAs. - Many industry groups have disputed the projected
savings, contending Medicare reimbursement cuts
in recent years -- particularly surrounding
oxygen and power mobility devices -- make the
billion-dollar projection unrealistic.
11Current problems with the Bid
- Many hundreds of suppliers the majority with
relatively lower capacities are low-balling
with the assumption of increasing the likelihood
of their bid acceptance! - Many others are misinformed. Example My bid
must be at least 20 below the current allowable
12CBSS joke of a system ()
- Mark - What is the protocol for contacting an
individual capable of addressing the multitude of
problems with this terrible excuse for a
submission system? I mean Mark, realistically
how are we supposed to meet a July 13th deadline.
Here it is June 14th Ive started early and the
system is freezing on me continuously. The system
has given me on multiple computers in my network,
JavaScript on top of JavaScript errors, error
500s during updating of pages aside other
problems - () Actual text message from HME provider to me
on 6/14/2004
13- Their help desk is reading from a script which
is more frustrating then it is pathetic. Who can
we absolutely blast with emails, calls, and faxes
beside Mr. Kuhn about this government train
wreck. It has taken hours on top of hours just to
finish one category properly.
14Which Areas Are Affected?
- CMS began with a list of the fifty largest
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) based on
2005 population. CMS then selected 25 that had
the largest total allowed Medicare charges for
DMEPOS in calendar year 2005. The 25 MSAs were
to be ranked according to two criteria allowed
DMEPOS charges per beneficiary, and the number of
DMEPOS suppliers per beneficiary receiving DMEPOS
items.
15MSA Surprises
- Cleveland AND Cincinnati AND Pittsburgh
- No Houston
- No Atlanta
- Orlando vs. Tampa
- San Juan
16Which areas affect NCAMES members?
- The CBAs are defined by ZIP codes. Many rural
ZIPs, that would be included in the official U.S.
Census Bureau MSA, were deemed non-competitive
and hence not included within the CBA. Providers
may find the actual ZIP codes affected on the
CBIC site. Maps of the CBA are also available.
17The Charlotte-Gastonia-Concord, NC-SC CBA (Except
Mail-Order Diabetic Supplies)
18Mail-Order CBA
19CBA ZIP Code Detail
20Mail Order ZIP Code CBA varies check the web
site!
21Mail Order
22Implementation
- The competitive bidding program will be phased in
over several years The 10 CBAs announced, with
70 more CBAs in 2009, and at least 10 others in
2010. - Payment under the first round of the competitive
bidding program will go into effect in April,
2008.
23Product Categories for NCAMES
- Oxygen equipment and supplies
- Respiratory assist devices and CPAPs
- Standard power mobility devices
- Complex power rehab
- Diabetic supplies (Mail Order Only)
- Enteral nutrition
- Hospital beds and accessories
- Walkers
- Negative pressure wound therapy devices
24Supplier Eligibility
- All bidders must be accredited (or be in the
process of becoming accredited) by a CMS approved
accreditation organization - Abide by final quality standards, including
financial, business, and customer service
standards, in addition to product-specific
standards. - CMS will require evidence of financial resources
to support potential market expansion. CMS will
also analyze certain financial ratios of
bidders.
25Supplier Capacity
- If a supplier estimates that it can furnish more
than 20 percent of the expected beneficiary
demand for the product category in the CBA, CMS
will lower that suppliers capacity estimate to
20 percent. - This capacity adjustment is necessary to ensure
that at least 5 suppliers furnish the items per
product category. According to CMS, sufficient
contract suppliers in the CBA to provide
beneficiaries with variety and choice.
26Supplier Capacity
- In an unlikely scenario, CMS will award at least
two contracts if there are less than five
suppliers meeting the requirements and these
suppliers have sufficient capacity to satisfy
beneficiary demand for the product category
calculated. - The provisions do not apply to regional or
nationwide mail order CBAs.
27Bidding
- Bidding by product categories requires bidders to
submit bids on multiple items (by HCPC code)
within the product category. CMS will aggregate
these individual bids into a composite bid in
order to compare bidders with each other. The
composite bid would be equal to the weighted
sum of the bids for the items in the product
category.
28The Bid Process
- Competitive bidding items will be included in
product categories and identified by HCPCS codes.
Suppliers may choose to bid on one, some, or all
of the product categories, but if they bid on a
category, they must bid on each item included in
the category. - Bidders who bid at or below the pivotal bid are
winning bidders, assuming they meet accreditation
and other requirements. - CMS will use the median price (the middle bid)
of the bids submitted by the winners
29The Pivotal Bid
- This is the point where beneficiary demand is met
by supplier capacity. Generally, all bids above
this point (in ) are non-contract, or losing,
bidders. - CMS will evaluate the composite bid of all
eligible bidders for an entire product category,
and begin with the lowest bid, and add
subsequently higher bids until the capacity is
met. - CMS states this will offer the lowest expected
costs to Medicare for all items in a product
category.
30- Confused over the composite bid or pivotal
bid terms? Lets use an example
31Respiratory Assist Devices and CPAP Category
Bidding Example () Assume CBA Capacity 100
32Apply HCPC Weights
33Sum Weighted HCPC Bids To Obtain Composite
Category Bid
34Determine Capacity of each Supplier (Units)
Capacity of CBA is 100
35Select Lowest Composite Bid - Add Additional
Suppliers- Until Capacity Reached
363 Suppliers Reach 100 Capacity. At this point,
the Pivotal Bid is met. (All Bids over 130 are
excluded)
37These 3 Suppliers Receive the Median Of Each HCPC
Code
38- The five bids received for CPAP ranged from 80
to 90. However, with the pivotal bid and median
taken into account, the winning bidders all
receive 82.
39Exception In the Example
- For simplicity purposes, this example did NOT
take into account the 20 maximum capacity
discussed a few minutes ago.
40The Bid Weights
- The HCPC weights and bid limits (current
Medicare fee schedule) are now available for
review on www.dmecompetitivebid.com. - Many industry stakeholders (MED Group, VGM,
Invacare, Roho, Nestle, et al) have developed
electronic/spreadsheet-type tools to assist
providers
41Commonly Owned
- Special rules apply to commonly-owned suppliers
(defined to mean that one supplier has an
ownership interest of 5 or more in another
supplier) and commonly-controlled suppliers
(defined to mean that an owner of one supplier is
an officer, director or partner in another
supplier).
42- If two or more suppliers are commonly-owned or
controlled, they may submit only one bid to
furnish a product category in a particular CBA. - All commonly-owned or controlled suppliers that
are located in the CBA, and all commonly owned or
controlled suppliers that are not located in the
CBA but that will furnish the product category to
beneficiaries within the CBA, must be included in
the bid.
43Small Supplier Target
- In the Final Rule CMS changed the definition of a
small supplier to be a supplier that generates
gross revenue of 3.5 million or less (compared
to the proposed rules 6 million in revenues.) - CMS set a target number of 30 for small supplier
participation. Small suppliers must meet all
bidding requirements.
44- CMS will review whether the number of small
suppliers whose bids are at or below the pivotal
bid is less than the 30 CMS target number. - If the number of small suppliers is lower, CMS
will offer small suppliers whose bids were most
close to, but above, the pivotal (cutoff) bid,
the option of accepting a contract to furnish the
product category at the contract amount. - Many HMEs are confused by this targetNOT the
same as the SBA small business set-aside!
45Important Note!
- The 30 target requires 30 of the winning
bidders to be designated as small suppliers.
This does NOT suggest that 30 of the Medicare
payments in any product category will be directed
to small suppliers. - Effectively, there is no guarantee of any minimum
percentage directed to small suppliers.
46If a supplier declines the bid
- If one of the successful bidders decides not to
accept a contract, then a contract will be
offered to the supplier whose composite bid was
the lowest of the unsuccessful bids
47Payments
- CMS will pay the supplier 80 of the single
payment amount for the item in the CBA where the
beneficiary maintains a permanent residence. - The remaining 20 will be the beneficiarys
coinsurance responsibility. - The payment amount will remain in effect for the
full three-year term of the contracts they will
not be adjusted for inflation. - Contract suppliers will be required to accept
assignment. - Suppliers may still use ABNs for items for which
Medicare might not pay.
48Beneficiary/Travel Rules
- Beneficiaries who live in a CBA will be permitted
to obtain DMEPOS only from contracted suppliers.
Beneficiaries whose permanent residence is
outside a CBA but visit a CBA also will be
required to utilize contracted suppliers. - If the area that the beneficiary is visiting is
not a CBA, or if the area is a competitive
bidding area but the item needed by the
beneficiary is not included in the competitive
bidding program for that area, they must obtain
the item from a supplier that has a valid
Medicare supplier number. - In either case, payment to the supplier will be
paid based on the bid amount for the item in the
competitive bidding area where the beneficiary
maintains a permanent residence.
49Grandfathering/Transitioning
- Monthly rental oxygen Arrangements entered
into before the start of a competitive bidding
program can be continued. The supplier must
agree to accept the competitive bidding price.
Losing suppliers cannot take on new patients for
these items. - Inexpensive/routinely purchased items furnished
on a rental basis, items requiring frequent and
substantial servicing, and capped rental items
Grandfathered supplier may continue furnishing
these items in accordance with existing rental
agreements.
50- Allows beneficiaries to continue to rent items
from their existing supplier, even if that
supplier has lost its contract status under a
subsequent competitive bidding program.
51- CMS intent is to drive all business for
competitively bid products to the contract
supplier. Beneficiaries who visit the competitive
bidding area and need products included in the
bidding program would be required to obtain them
from a contract supplier. - Conversely, beneficiaries who live in a
competitive bidding area and need competitively
bid equipment when they visit other areas can
obtain the equipment from any Medicare supplier.
However, Medicare will only pay the competitive
bidding contract amount for the item.
52- The proposed rule required winning bidders to
accept every beneficiary in the CBA no matter how
many months rental they have remaining on their
equipment. CMS refers to this as a beneficiary
protection in the event the beneficiary has a
supplier who loses the bid and does not agree to
the grandfathering terms. - However, the final rule somewhat mitigated
supplier concern relative to the monthly rental
issue
53- For oxygen, CMS allows suppliers that must begin
furnishing oxygen equipment after the rental
period has already begun to a beneficiary who is
no longer renting the item from his or her
previous supplier (because the previous supplier
elected not to become a grandfathered supplier or
the beneficiary elected to change suppliers) will
receive at least 10 rental payments for
furnishing the equipment. - If the beneficiary transitions to a new contract
supplier, the oxygen and oxygen equipment must be
returned to the original supplier that owns the
equipment.
54- For capped rentals, CMS allows suppliers
furnishing items to a beneficiary who is no
longer renting the item from their previous
supplier (because the previous supplier elected
not to become a grandfathered supplier or the
beneficiary elected to change suppliers) to
receive 13 monthly rental payments for the item,
regardless of how many monthly rental payments
Medicare previously made to the prior supplier
(assuming the item remains medically necessary). - At the end of this new 13 month rental period,
the contract supplier will still transfer title
to the capped rental item to the beneficiary.
55Important Exception
- This rule does not apply when a beneficiary who
is renting a capped rental item from a contract
supplier elects to obtain the same item from
another contract supplier, because the
grandfathering provisions only apply to those
situations in which a beneficiary had been
previously receiving the item from a non-contract
supplier. - A new contract supplier would be paid rental only
for the duration of the rental period.
56Grandfathering Other Items
- CMS We do not believe we have authority to
allow grandfathering for other DMEPOS, such as
glucose testing supplies and enteral nutrition,
equipment, and supplies.
57Other Payment Provisions
- If Medicare is the secondary payor for a
beneficiary who resides in a CBA, and the primary
insurer requires the beneficiary to obtain items
from a supplier that is not a contract supplier,
then Medicare may pay the secondary payment to
the noncontract supplier. - If a beneficiary receives an item covered under
competitive bidding from a noncontract supplier
within a CBA, and payment is not grandfathered,
then the beneficiary will have no financial
liability to the supplier.
58Specific Brand
- A physician may prescribe a particular brand of
an item, or a particular mode of delivery, if it
is determined the brand or mode of delivery would
avoid an adverse medical outcome for the
beneficiary. - The supplier must either provide the brand/mode
prescribed or consult with the physician to find
an appropriate alternative brand/mode and obtain
a revised prescription, or, alternatively, assist
the beneficiary in locating a contract supplier
that can furnish the prescribed item.
59Specific Brand Payment
- Medicare will pay the supplier only the single
payment amount. The regulations specify that
there is no extra payment for a specific brand or
mode of delivery ordered by a physician.
60Repair and Maintenance
- Repair and maintenance of competitively bid
items, including replacement parts, may be
provided by any supplier with a Medicare billing
number. - Payment for parts and labor will be generally as
it is now, unless a part that is needed is itself
a competitively-bid item (such as a wheelchair
battery), in which case the single payment amount
will apply.
61Education and Outreach
- 1/1/2008 - 4/1/2008 CMS will conduct intensive
beneficiary and referral agent education
campaign. - These resources will include customer service
support and ombudsmen networks. The claims
processing system will also be used as a vehicle
for information relating to this program. - An instructional Webinar for suppliers is now
available on www.dmecompetitivebid.com.
62Examples of Beneficiary Education
- Q Will I have to get my equipment or supplies
from a different supplier? - A You may have to change suppliers. However, if
you are currently renting equipment or oxygen,
you may have the choice to stay with your current
supplier if they choose to continue to furnish
the rented equipment. In certain cases, your
doctor or other health professional can supply
needed equipment or supplies to you if it is part
of your treatment. Whether you have to change
suppliers or not, you will still be able to get
the Medicare-covered equipment and supplies that
you need when you need them.
63ExampleQ How will I know what supplier to
use?
- To find out if your zip code is included in a
Competitive Bidding Area (CBA), you may call
1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) or you may search
CBAs and zip codes at www.medicare.gov.
64Inherent Reasonableness??
- NCB will generate a rich HME database even if it
doesn't result in substantial cost savings. - CMS will have detailed information on what
bidders in the first 10 MSAs are willing to
charge and, by implication, how low they can go
and still stay in business. CMS could use the
data to impose an inherent-reasonableness
standard on the entire industry.
65CMS Opportunity to Create Networks
- Small suppliers (lt3.5 million in revenue) may
join/form networks if they do not service the
entire Geographical area of the CBA. - Networks must comply with all applicable laws,
including the federal antitrust laws. - The small suppliers forming the network must have
market shares that do not exceed 20 percent of
the expected beneficiary demand for the product
category. - No more than 20 small suppliers may participate
in a network. - Relatively few Networks have formed due to
limited timeframes and competition issues.
66Other Final Rule Changes or Clarifications
- Proposed CPI increases over three year period
removed No Payment Adjustment to Account for
Inflation - Starting in 2009 CMS has the authority to adjust
payment amounts in non-bid areas based upon bid
amounts in bid areas - CMS will not require that repairs of
beneficiary-owned competitively bid items be
performed by contract suppliers. This policy
will also apply to maintenance services required
by the DRA. - After considering generally negative comments,
CMS removed the rebate program.
67Change of Ownership
- If a contract supplier is acquired by or merges
into a non-contract supplier, and the noncontract
supplier meets the requirements for contract
suppliers, CMS may award a contract to the
acquiring supplier. CMS believes that a supplier
should not automatically become a contract
supplier by merging with or acquiring a contract
supplier. - In any case, a contract supplier must notify CMS
if it is negotiating a change in ownership 60
days before the anticipated date of the change.
68Physicians/Practitioners, SNFs Hospital-based
Suppliers
- The Final Rule permits physicians and certain
nonphysician practitioners to furnish certain
competitively bid items to their own patients
without submitting a bid and being selected as a
contract supplier. - HOWEVER. SNFs NFs must bid (and compete to
serve their own patients!) - CMS We believe it is appropriate to include
them in the same bidding process as other
suppliers because the statute requires us to
conduct bidding for items in which we expect
savings. - Hospital-based suppliers also must bid
69Accreditation Timeline
- In order to participate in the Medicare DMEPOS
Competitive Bidding Program, suppliers must meet
quality standards and be accredited by a
CMS-approved Deemed Accreditation Organization.
Suppliers that are interested in bidding under
the new program must be aware of two key
deadlines - Suppliers must be accredited or be pending
accreditation to submit a bid. CMS cannot accept
a bid from any supplier that is not accredited or
that has not applied for accreditation.
70Deadline Announced for Initial CBAs!
- Suppliers will need to be accredited to be
awarded a contract. The accreditation deadline
for the first round of competitive bidding is
August 31, 2007. Suppliers must be accredited
before this date to be awarded a contract.
Suppliers should apply for accreditation
immediately to allow adequate time to process
their applications.
71Recognized National Accreditation Organizations
- Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations - Community Health Accreditation Program
- Healthcare Quality Association on Accreditation
- National Board of Accreditation for Orthotic
Suppliers/Board of Certification in Pedorthics
(merged) - Accreditation Commission for Healthcare Inc.
- Board for Orthotist/Prosthetist Certification
- National Association of Boards of Pharmacy
- Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities - American Board for Certification in Orthotics and
Prosthetics Inc. - The Compliance Team Inc.
72Bidding has opened!!!!
- The initial registration process requires the
authorized official, (see Section 15 of the CMS
855S) to complete the information required in the
internet application. - The authorized official's information must match
the information on file at the National Supplier
Clearinghouse.
73To Register
- https//applications.cms.hhs.gov/
- Suppliers must have the USER ID and password
before they can enter a bid into the competitive
bidding internet application.
74Assistance
- Access a user guide for the Individuals
Authorized Access to CMS Computer Services (IACS)
application before attempting initial
registration. This guide can be found on the
Competitive Bidding Implementation Contractor's
website at http//www.dmecompetitivebid.com/cbic/c
bic.nsf/(pages)/home. - Or, call the CBIC helpdesk on 1-877-577-5331.
75The Competitive Bidding Application Process
Four Forms
- CMS-10169A Form A Application
- CMS-10169B Form B Bidding Sheet per category
bidding on - CMS-10169C Form C Medicare DMEPOS Competitive
Bidding Program Contract Supplier Quarterly
Report - CMS-10169D Form D Competitive Bidding Program
Beneficiary Survey
76Process for Submission of Required Documents
- All hardcopy documents required as attachments to
the electronic bid submission must be sent to the
CBIC as one complete package. Each document must
be identified by the suppliers bidder number to
ensure that this information is placed with the
correct application. - CMS strongly recommends that the package be sent
to the CBIC using a method that can be tracked
(e.g., certified mail).
77- Irrespective of whether the bid is submitted
electronically or by mail, the supplier must sign
the certification statement identified on the
application and submit that with the hardcopy
financial documents. All documents must be
postmarked by 900 p.m., July 13, 2007, and
mailed to - CBIC PO Box 907 Augusta, GA 30999
78Additional information required
- Supplier Financial Statements
- Suppliers Credit Report and Score
- Signed legal contracts between all network
members, if applicable - Signed letter of intent to enter into an
agreement if supplier plans to expand capacity
through use of subcontractors - Copy of Accreditation Organizations Certificate
of Accreditation, if applicable.
79Financial Requirements
- Suppliers that submit corporate tax returns must
submit the following documents for the last 3
years - Schedule L from the tax return (balance sheet)
- Statement of changes in financial position (cash
flow) - Statement of operations (income statement)
80Financial Requirements
- All documents that are not prepared as part of a
tax return must be certified as accurate by the
supplier. (Audited documents are not required.) - All documents must be prepared on a accrual or
cash basis of accounting - Publicly traded companies will submit a copy of
their 10-K Filing reports
81Financial Requirements
- New suppliers must submit projected financial
statements for any year they they do not have
past financial information because they were not
in business as a DMEPOS supplier and/or did not
service the area.
82CMS Financial Health Evaluation
- The CBIC will use standard accounting ratios
(obtained by review of the financial documents
that all bidders must submit) to evaluate the
financial health of the bidder. - CBIC will also use the suppliers credit history
in the evaluation. - According to CMS, this will determine whether the
supplier will be able to participate in the
program and maintain viability for the duration
of the contract period.
83A financial ratio is
- A relationship often a percentage - between two
of the items selected from the documents bidders
will submit. - Ratio analysis is one method in which CMS will
evaluate weak and strong points in an HMEs
financial (and perhaps managerial) performance.
84The current ratio
- Current assets divided by current debts
- It is a measure of the cash or near cash position
(liquidity) of the company. - Indicates if your company has enough cash to pay
current creditors. The higher the ratio, the
more liquid the firm's position is and, hence,
the higher the credibility of the firm. - In HME, a current ratio of 1.5 to 2.5 or more
generally indicates sufficient liquidity.
85Average collection period
- Divide accounts receivable by daily sales other
than cash. - Tells you the length of time it takes your HME to
get its cash after billing or making a sale on
credit. The shorter this period the quicker the
cash inflow is. - HMEs should develop an aging schedule to gauge
the trend of collections and identify the slow
payers. Slow collections hinder cash flow and
also hurt your profit.
86- In recent years (2005 2006) a survey of the
average collection period for independently owned
HMEs was as follows - DME (E0260, K0001, E0143, Etc.) 66 days
- Respiratory (E1390, J7619, E7619, Etc.) 48 days
- Rehab (K0800, K0856, E1010, Etc.) 88 days.
87Accounts payable to sales
- Dividing the accounts payable of the company by
its annual net sales. - Gives you an indication as to how much of the
HMEs suppliers (e.g., equipment vendors) money
the company is using in order to fund its sales. - A low percentage would indicate a healthy ratio.
A high percentage indicates the firm may be using
suppliers to help finance operations. - Common ratios in HME are from 20 to 30.
88The quick ratio (or acid-test ratio)
- Divide quick assets (cash and accounts
receivable) by current liabilities. - Purpose is to test the company's ability to meet
its current obligations. This test doesn't
include inventory to make it a stiffer test of
the company's liquidity. - Tells you if the HME could meet its current
obligations with quickly convertible assets
should sales revenues suddenly cease. - In HME, a quick ratio of 1.0 or more generally
indicates sufficient liquidity
89Current Liabilities to Net Worth
- Measure of the extent to which the HME is using
creditor funds versus their own investment to
finance the business (Current Liabilities /
Liabilities Equity). - A ratio of .5 or higher may indicate inadequate
owner investment or an extended accounts payable
period. - Care should be taken not to offend your equipment
vendors to the extent it affects your ability to
conduct day to day business.
90Return on Sales
- This percentage measure of profits after taxes on
the years sales (profits earned per dollar of
sales). - The higher this ratio, the better prepared the
HME business is to handle downtrends brought on
by adverse conditions.
91Sales to Inventory or Inventory Turnover Ratio
- Obtained by dividing annual net sales of the
company by total inventory. - The ratio is regarded as a test of efficiency and
indicates the rapidity with which the HME is able
to move its equipment, and how fast inventory is
moving the cash flow into the business. - If ratio is high, it may indicate a situation
where sales are being lost because equipment is
under stocked and/or customers are buying
elsewhere. - If the ratio is too low, this may show that
equipment inventories are obsolete or stagnant.
92Working capital
- Represents the amount of day-by-day operating
liquidity available to a business. Also known as
operating capital, it is calculated as current
assets minus current liabilities. - An HME can be endowed with assets and
profitability, but short of liquidity, if these
assets cannot readily be converted into cash. - A positive change in working capital indicates
that the business has either increased current
assets (that is received cash, or other current
assets) or has decreased current liabilities, for
example has paid off some short-term creditors.
93Quality of earnings
- Confusing financial metric to many!
- Calculated by dividing cash flow from operations
into the companys net annual income plus
depreciation. - The official definition is the amount of
earnings attributable to higher sales or lower
costs rather than artificial profits created by
accounting anomalies such as inflation of
inventory.
94An example may help
- An HME can show positive earnings on its income
statement while also bearing a negative cash
flow. This is not a good situation to be in for a
long time, because it means that the HME has to
borrow money to keep operating. And at some
point, the bank will stop lending and want to be
repaid. - A negative cash flow also indicates that there is
a fundamental operating problem either the
equipment inventory is not selling or
billing/receivables are not being collected.
95Operating cash flow to sales
- Percent measuring capability of a HME companys
ability to convert sales into cash. - Important indicator of an HMEs creditworthiness
and productivity. - If ratio is low, then growth may not be
financially possible because the company will not
have enough cash flow to increase operations to
meet higher demands and sales targets. - If the ratio is high, then the company will be
able to grow and expand because it has enough
cash flow to finance additional production.
96IMPORTANT NOTES
- All ratios measuring profitability can be
computed either before or after taxes, depending
on the purpose of the computations. - Acknowledging the CMS requirement, HMEs should
recognize that the ratios have limitations.
Since the information used to derive ratios is
itself based on accounting rules and personal
judgments, as well as facts, the ratios cannot be
considered absolute indicators of financial
position. - Ratios are only one means of assessing the
performance of the company and must be considered
in perspective with many other measures.
97A Bid Application FAQ
- The bid application requires that you list the
manufacturer, make and model number(s) of the
products you intend to provide if you are
selected as a winning bidder. Are you locked into
only providing those items for the duration of
the contract or, if not, what is the process for
updating your contract to include new models or
manufacturers?
98- Suppliers are not locked into furnishing only
these products during the contract period. - Suppliers must report what products they are
furnishing on a quarterly basis (See Form C). - Suppliers cannot report that they are offering
certain items if they are not providing those
specific items to Medicare beneficiaries. - Suppliers cannot discriminate against
beneficiaries. The items a contract supplier
furnishes to Medicare beneficiaries under its
contract must be the same items furnished to
other customers.
99Weight Utilization May Be Confusing!!!
- Bids are weighted by utilization and not expenses
( reimbursed by Medicare). - Low cost high utilization items have high weights
whereas high cost low volume items have low
weights.
100For examplein CPAP/RAD
- A7038 (FILTER, DISPOSABLE) is weighted (out of
1.00) -- 0.224623254, and the one unit fee
schedule amount is 5.39 - E0601(CONTINUOUS POSITIVE AIRWAY PRESSURE) is
weighted (out of 1.00) --0.0601943846, and the
one unit fee schedule amount is 1,052.60 - When the weights are applied within a product
category, the effect is to possibly distort the
composite bid amount in a way that is not
immediately obvious!
101Bid Submission Timelines
- Suppliers have until July 13, 2007 to submit bids
after the release of the RFB. - Suppliers may submit bids 24 hours a day, 7 days
a week. - During the 60 day window, suppliers may amend
their bids as many times as necessary. - Once the 60 day window closes, however, no
amendments will be allowed. - However, some industry analysts suspect that the
CBIC may be pressured to extend the bid
submission deadline due to numerous systems
problems.
102Editing or Status of Your Bid
- Login to the Competitive Bid Submission System
(CBSS) at https//cbss.cms.hhs.gov/ - To modify your application or bid From the
homepage, access the appropriate tab (Form A or
Form B) at the top of the page. Then go to the
appropriate section heading. Complete the
appropriate section you wish to modify and click
Update. Then access the homepage to review your
status.
103- On the Home Page, See Status Your
Application Status is either - Incomplete You have not entered data in all of
the required fields. - Submitted You have entered data in all the
required fields and CBIC is waiting for your
hardcopy documentation package. - Complete CBIC has received your Form A hardcopy
documentation.
104Your Bid Status is either
- Incomplete You have not entered all required
data for Form B questions and/or the bid sheet. - Not Certified You have entered data in all
required fields but have not completed the
"Certify" screen. - Certified You have entered data in all required
fields and have certified your bid. CBIC is
waiting for your required Certification Statement
and if applicable, Expansion Letter(s) of
Agreement. - Complete CBIC has received all hardcopy
documentation and your bid will be considered for
evaluation.
105 106- Suppliers will choose from one of three
options in subcontracting agreements - 1). Product line support
- 2). Geographic access support,
- 3). Personnel support.
107- The product line support option is for those
suppliers who can deliver product to the entire
geographic area of the CBA, but may not be able
to supply the amount of product to cover all of
its customers needs. - The geographic support option is for suppliers
who do not have the capacity to deliver items
throughout the entire CBA. - The personnel support option is for suppliers who
do not have the administrative personnel to
handle the volume of business in the CBA.
108- Probably the best option at this time. (Network
formation has been very limited due to minimal
bidding window times) - Supplier can bid for a product category in a CBA
and also becoming a subcontractor to another
supplier that submits a bid in the same CBA for
the same product category.
109Example
- A supplier can bid to become an oxygen contract
supplier and be awarded a contract and still be a
subcontractor for another oxygen contract
supplier. In addition, a supplier that submits a
bid and loses can become a subcontractor to a
contract supplier.
110And
- CMS will NOT evaluate subcontractors to determine
if they meet the accreditation, quality,
financial, and eligibility standards. - However, a supplier may not subcontract with any
supplier that has been excluded from the Medicare
program, any State health program or any other
government branch. - The subcontractor will not have to submit a bid
to be a subcontractor.
111Letter of Intent Required!
- Clear identification of parties
- Description of functions/services to be performed
by the subcontractors - Language clearly indicating that the
subcontractor has agreed to supply the items,
functions and or services - Anticipated length of agreement
- Signature of each authorized official or each
party - Language obligating subcontractor to abide by
State and Federal privacy and Security
requirements, including those provisions stated
in the regulation for this program
112Subcontracting Templates Available from many
industry stakeholders
- The Letter of Intent allows a potential
Contractor and Subcontractor to quickly enter
into a basic agreement, and then they can
finalize the details through a more formal
subcontracting agreement. A Letter of Intent is
typically the first step in an agreement, and its
purpose is to encompass the basic terms of a deal
clearly and efficiently. A Letter of Intent will
satisfy CMS's request for information regarding
subcontractors at the time of the bid.
113Subcontracting Agreement
- A Subcontracting Agreement Template is required
for the purpose of facilitating the
subcontracting process and intended to be used to
create a binding contract between parties. - It may be executed after the winning bidders have
been announced.
114Can I decline a bid if I win?
- Once the payment amount is determined, suppliers
are NOT obligated to sign the contract if they
perceive the amount as unacceptable. - Suppliers that do accept the payment amount are
contractually obligated for the entire period
(estimated at 3 years).
115- What if our bid is not accepted in one or more
categories? -
116To begin, your Medicare patient service in a
losing product category will not immediately
cease!
- As noted, there are grandfathering provisions for
all items (except glucose testing supplies,
enteral nutrition, equipment, and supplies). - Oxygen provisions allow reimbursement for the
remainder of the rental period (to 36 months) at
the new contract rate - Capped rental provisions maintain the current fee
schedule amount.
117Beneficiary Choice
- Beneficiaries may opt to continue renting from
the grandfathered supplier (who will furnish on
same terms) but they may choose to switch to a
contract supplier at any time. Inform your
patients that you will continue to provide
quality service. - However, if you choose to grandfather you must
do so for all of your current beneficiaries in
the product category. You cannot select a
certain patient population. - Grandfathering is applicable if win this
bidding period, but lose your contract status in
the next bid period (2011).
118Subcontracting Opportunities!
- Many winning (if not most) bidders will need
subcontractors! Contract suppliers must service
the entire CBA. - If you are not submitting a bid, or desire to
mitigate loss of a product category, begin to
review the subcontracting regulations. - Begin discussions with suppliers now, prepare
template legal contracts/Letters of Intent, etc.
119Provide Non-Bid Products and Services and/or
Diversify!
- The nine product categories applicable to NC/SC
are now known. Suppliers may continue to provide
to Medicare beneficiaries products not covered in
the first round (ex manual wheelchairs) - Seek alternative sources of revenue, such as
120Retail
- Many HMEs undervalue retail sales opportunities
- Retail/showroom consultants are widely available
- No delay in reimbursement!
121Cash sales to Medicare beneficiaries are allowed,
but limited!
- You must submit claims on beneficiaries behalf
when requested - Many suppliers have forms beneficiaries sign
indicating they did not authorize the claim to be
submitted to Medicare. The beneficiary pays cash
and eliminates the suppliers obligation to
submit. - (However, even if the statement is signed, a
beneficiary can later change his mind and require
the claim be submitted.)
122Supplier Usual Price Issue
- Restrictions exist on cash sales! Cannot bill
Medicare substantially more than retail price. - CMS suggests 20 is limit for all
non-governmental sources. - Suppliers cannot open a separate retail shop
(under same tax ID) to circumvent the restriction
123Other Facilities
- Residents in many long term care facilities (not
SNF) may receive Part B as if they were in their
homes. If the facility is not paid a per diem
rate, suppliers may either bill Medicare
directly, or, in some cases, the facility will
contract directly with the DME to provide
equipment. - Hospice. While no patient reimbursement is
allowed, hospices may purchase equipment direct,
or arrange for a per diem/per bed rental
arrangement
124- VA Hospitals Facilities. These large
purchasers routinely send out RFPs for DME. An
overview of the VA bid process may be found at
www.va.gov/osbdu/library/factsheet/smoothprocessCl
aims submission information may be found at
www1.va.gov/oamm/index.htm
125Others
- State prison systems/ medical detention
centers. Contact the Department of Corrections
in your state at www.corrections.com/links/viewlin
ks.asp?cat30 - Resort Hotels Casinos. Suppliers who live in
larger marketplaces should consider visiting
these facilities. Many have begun providing
wheelchairs and scooters and other DME to their
guests. - Airports. Many airports are served by the local
HME for wheelchairs and other equipment.
126Other Options ?
- Expand Commercial Insurance
- Expand into geographic areas not covered by
competitive bidding - Sell the business to a successful bidder
127Demonstration Summary Positive Results
Achievable!
- There were increases in business reported by
contract suppliers in both demonstration areas. - Participating providers ran more streamlined
businessesresulting in higher profit margins. - Providers diversified into new areas that became
very profitable. - Providers improved efficiencies and performance
in collecting AR and secondary collections.
128- Many providers increased third party insurance
contracts and business - Creative marketing techniques were developed to
grow business - Better training of employees resulted
- Compliance improved.
- Providers were more audit savvy.
129- Current Regulatory Compliance Issue Update
130The DRA
- The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) is the
first Medicare legislation since the passage of
the Medicare Modernization Act in 2003. - The DRA achieves 8.3 billion in savings from
Medicare programs and 4.7 billion in savings
from Medicaid and the State Children's Health
Insurance Program.
131- The DRA was passed by the House on December 19,
2005, and the following week, the Senate passed
the DRA, with Vice President Cheney casting the
tie-breaking vote. - The President signed the DRA into law on February
1, 2006.
132Main Changes for HME
- Capped rental items now only rent for 13 months
- Oxygen will rent for 36 consecutive months
- After rental period is over the title of the
equipment transfers to the patient - 36 month rental period for Oxygen equipment
started on January 1, 2006 for all oxygen
equipment
133Oxygen Contents
- Payment for stationary and portable oxygen
equipment will transfer to beneficiary at the end
of the 36 month rental period - Medicare will continue to pay for Oxygen contents
(liquid or gas) for a long as the equipment
remains medically necessary (payments will begin
after the 36 month of rental for the equipment
and go on for as long as the equipment is
medically necessary and the supplier is supplying
the portable oxygen)
134Portable Oxygen Tanks
- At the end of the rental period the title of the
tanks will transfer to the beneficiary - Suppliers will be required to swap out
beneficiary owned tanks just as propane tanks are
now swapped out where owners get different tanks
each time they need replacement contents - The propane tank swap method will allow
providers to be able to handle recall situations
as they currently do
135Safety Concerns
- Medicare will also pay for the provider to pick
up and store or dispose of tanks and cylinders
that are no longer medically needed by the
beneficiary - Suppliers could submit the bill for the above
mentioned service any time after the beneficiary
has acquired ownership of the tanks or cylinders
136Obligation
- Medicare believes the supplier that furnishes the
equipment in the first month, in which the rental
payment is made, has an obligation to continue
furnishing the item for the entire period of
medical necessity, up to the time when the title
of the equipment transfers to the beneficiary. - The beneficiary should have an expectation that
he/she will not be forced to change equipment or
suppliers unless he/she wants to - This provision was put in place to prevent
providers from taking back the rented equipment
just before the rental period expires in order to
retain title of the equipment
137Changing Suppliers
- If a beneficiary changes suppliers the continuous
rental period does not start over - Suppliers are not required to accept
beneficiaries simply because they want to change
suppliers
138Transfer of Ownership
- Ownership must be transferred to the beneficiary
at the 13 (capped rental) or 36 (oxygen
equipment) month regardless of whether or not the
beneficiary has made all of their co-insurance
payments. - Transfer of ownership is made on the first day
that begins after the 13 (capped) or 36th
(oxygen) continuous month in which payment was
made
139- This transfer does not apply to backup equipment
that beneficiary may have in their home as
Medicare has not paid for that equipment - The provider must make sure they can legally
transfer ownership at the 13th or 36th month
(i.e. there is not a lease they paying or some
other type of arrangement with the manufacturer
that would not allow them to transfer ownership)
140Beneficiary Disclosure
- No later than 2 months prior to the title
transfer date for oxygen the supplier must
disclose to the beneficiary - Whether it can maintain and service the equipment
after equipment title transfer - If they plan to continue to deliver oxygen
contents to the beneficiary after equipment title
transfer
141Swapping Equipment Out
- Suppliers cannot replace newer more valuable
equipment used by the beneficiary with less
valuable or older equipment from its inventory - Replacement items must be equipment that is at a
minimum, in the same condition as the equipment
being replaced (same or equivalent make and model)
142Maintenance
- Beginning 6 months after the title of the oxygen
equipment transfers to the beneficiary, the
supplier can bill for general maintenance and
servicing of certain beneficiary-owned oxygen
equipment - The supplier can bill for this equipment every 6
months - The payment will be limited to a maximum of 30
minutes of general maintenance for servicing the
equipment
143 Maintenance Labor
- Payment would be limited to 30 minutes of labor
and additional charges for any replacement parts
necessary to properly service the equipment
during these calls - If a supplier services beneficiary owned oxygen
equipment more often than every 6 months, or
services beneficiary owned capped rental items at
any time, only payments for non-routine
maintenance and servicing will be made - Beneficiaries will be required to pay the 20
coinsurance for each service call
144Interesting Point
- Beneficiary can elect to not have maintenance
services performed after they have title on the
equipment at the 36th month, but it the equipment
fails before its useful life is over (at least 5
years of continuous use) you may be liable to
replace the equipment at your cost
145Cancellation of Service
- The provider must notify the beneficiary at least
2 months before the end of the rental period if
the supplier will not longer be maintaining and
servicing the equipment and/or delivering oxygen
contents once the transfer of the title of the
equipment takes place
146Non-Assigned
- If a supplier chooses to not accept assignment
then he/she can charge any amount over and above
the 20 copay for the rental of the DME item - May be a way to offset the additional cost of the
newer and more feature added items - Beneficiary would be responsible for the
difference between 80 of the Medicare allowed
payment and the amount the supplier charges for
the rental of the DME item - You must be a non-participating provider to do
this
147- Legislative Update H,R. 621, the Home Oxygen
Patient Protection (HOPP) Act would amend the
Deficit Reduction Act by restoring Medicare
treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment to the
system that existed before the law was enacted. - You can help! Urge your Congressperson to sign
on as co-sponsor. - To sign onto H.R. 621, contact Keagan Resler in
Congressman Prices office at 225-4501.
148NPI Contingency Plan
- As long as covered entities, including health
plans and covered health care providers, continue
to act in good faith to come into compliance,
meaning they are working towards being able to
accept and send NPIs on electronic transactions,
they may establish contingency plans to
facilitate the compliance of their trading
partners.
149Bottom line.
- May 23, 2007 deadline was not enforced
- Medicare FFS will allow continued use of legacy
numbers it will also accept transactions with
only NPIs, and transactions with both NPI and
legacy identifiers. - After May 23, 2008, the legacy number will NOT be
permitted on any inbound or outbound transaction.
150Evaluation
- Medicare FFS is now evaluating the number of
submitted claims containing a NPI. - If the analysis shows a sufficient number of
submitted claims contain a NPI, Medicare will
begin to reject claims on July 1, 2007, that do
not contain NPIs. - If a sufficient number of claims do not contain
NPIs in the May analysis, Medicare FFS will
assess compliance in June 2007 and determine
whether to begin rejecting claims in August 2007.
151CMS releases NPI data noticeProviders may review
information on Internet
- CMS will make the data publicly available on June
28 The data will be accessible by downloading
an initial file from a dedicated Web site, with
monthly update files also available, and by
searching a query-only database - Providers who have been assigned NPIs should
review their data and make any necessary updates
or corrections prior to June 28 to ensure their
information is accurate when disclosed by CMS.
152- CMS Discontinues the Unique Physician Identifier
Number (UPIN) RegistryEffective June 29, 2007,
CMS will discontinue assigning UPINs to Medicare
providers
153CMS-1500
- Beginning July 2, 2007, you must use the Form
CMS-1500, version (08-05) for paper claims
submission to Medicare. Claims received on or
after July 2, 2007 using Form CMS-1500, version
(12-90) will be rejected. - Make sure that your billing staffs use Form
CMS-1500 (08-05) for your claims, beginning July
2, 2007!
154- In November 2006, the United States Department of
Health and Human Services ("HHS"), Office of
Inspector General ("OIG"), released its Work Plan
for Fiscal Year 2007 ("Work Plan"). - The Work Plan details project areas targeted by
the OIG for audit, evaluation and investigation
during the federal fiscal year 2007. The Work
Plan can be accessed in its entirety on the OIGs
website at http//oig.hhs.gov/publications/docs/w
orkplan/2007/Work20Plan202007.pdf
155OIG Recommends
- Compliance Committee - Convene a compliance
committee meeting to discuss the work plan, with
particular emphasis on risk areas that impact
your health care organization. Document these
efforts by keeping written minutes of such
meeting. - Compliance Program Amendments - Carefully review
your compliance program to consider whether
amendments to the compliance program should be
made. New risk areas identified in the work plan
should be added to risk or audit areas set forth